AltWeeklies Wire

Lethal Rejection: Karl Chamberlain's Execution is Overnew

On Feb. 21, Karl Chamberlain received a rare greeting card from his half-sister, Liberty Chamberlain: "Happy Death Day," it read. "Glad you're still with us." Chamberlain, the first to receive an execution date once Texas reopened the execution chamber after a Supreme Court ruling, was executed by lethal injection on June 11.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Dave Maass  |  06-19-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Score: Constitution 5, Gulags 4new

The supreme court's recent decision not only restored habeas-corpus rights to enemy combatants, but gave all of us one our most important civil-liberty victories to date.
Boston Phoenix  |  Harvey Silverglate  |  06-19-2008  |  Civil Liberties

We're Number 48! Mass. Drivers Really Do Sucknew

According to a recently published study, Massachusetts drivers really do suck, but motorists in New Jersey, New York, and DC suck more.
Boston Phoenix  |  Mike Miliard  |  06-19-2008  |  Transportation

Old and New Media Are Still Squaring Off in Jocklandnew

For some reason, though, the general coming-together of the typewriter and podcast sets doesn't extend to sports. To an extent unmatched in any other journalistic subgroup, the (mostly) men who write stories and columns on the world of sports seem to regard their web-based successors (also mostly men) with a potent mix of contempt and rage.
Boston Phoenix  |  Adam Reilly  |  06-19-2008  |  Media

New Motions Favor Convicted Teennew

Convicted robber Erick Daniels won another break last week when Durham Superior Court Judge Orlando Hudson ordered the Durham Police Department to turn over evidence that could clear Daniels' name.
INDY Week  |  Mosi Secret  |  06-19-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Top BMF Figure Guiltynew

Witness: Rap star Young Jeezy got kilos of coke.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Mara Shalhoup  |  06-18-2008  |  Crime & Justice

In Texas, A Storied Prison Farm Gives Way to Suburban Sprawlnew

Today it's almost impossible to tell where Houston ends and Sugar Land begins, and therein lies the story of how Sugar Land's historic prison, once considered the pride of the Texas penal system, came to find itself in the middle of one of the fastest-growing communities in the nation.
The Texas Observer  |  Patsy Sims  |  06-18-2008  |  Housing & Development

Shipwright Brothers Explore the Future of Boat Buildingnew

Boat building is historically not the most environmentally sensitive of practices. In nearly 12 years of honing their craft, Jamison and Ryan Witbeck have learned both the difficulties and possibilities of being sustainable in the industry.
Charleston City Paper  |  Stratton Lawrence  |  06-18-2008  |  Business & Labor

There's No Evidence That Shows Popular Youth Curfew Laws Worknew

San Diego’s juvenile curfew law was enacted as a way to cut down on gang violence, and by that standard, it has failed. After 11 years and thousands of curfew citations and arrests since the law took effect, gang-related crimes are up 23 percent this year over last, and gang-related homicides increased 61 percent during that same period.
San Diego CityBeat  |  David Silva  |  06-18-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Ad Campaign Latest Effort to take Smithfield Foods to Tasknew

Faith leaders, elected officials and Smithfield workers will gather in D.C. to unveil a series of advertisements decrying working conditions at the company's sprawling hog processing plant in North Carolina. The ads will soon begin appearing on the sides of buses and metro station walls across the D.C. metropolitan area.
Port Folio Weekly  |  Vernal Coleman  |  06-18-2008  |  Business & Labor

The Untold Story of the Michael Vick Scandalnew

Vick's journey to federal prison began on March 2, 1999, when he was 18 years old, when cops stopped a Ford Econoline van with Virginia plates and a dangling pinetree air freshener and found two kilos of cocaine and a half kilo of heroin. Michael Vick had no connection with this bust, nor with the three men in the van. Yet the stop would have everything to do with the fate of the young star.
Port Folio Weekly  |  Joe Jackson  |  06-18-2008  |  Animal Issues

Mexicans and Their Employers Caught Up in Border Patrol's Anti-Terror Initiativesnew

A recent crackdown in Washington's San Juan County has netted 24 undocumented aliens -- but no terrorists.
Seattle Weekly  |  Jesse Froehling  |  06-17-2008  |  Immigration

From Car Seats to Condoms, Nasty Chemical Compounds Have Invaded Our Livesnew

Chemicals found in computer screens and car seats, shower curtains and shampoo, plastic water bottles and prophylactics are skewing our odds against cancers and causing developmental delays and reproductive roadblocks, including declining sperm counts.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Josh Zaffos  |  06-17-2008  |  Environment

Freddy Haynes Seemed a Shoo-In to Lead the NAACP ... So What Happened?new

Haynes' commitment to Rev. Jeremiah Wright's brand of theology -- the very thing that had shaped his ministry and brought him so much success -- may have derailed his chance to lead the nation's oldest civil rights organization.
Dallas Observer  |  Jesse Hyde  |  06-17-2008  |  Race & Class

Tourists Can't Wait to Get Next to Sharks, Even if They Are Eating Machinesnew

The world's love-hate relationship with sharkdom has created a sprawling, often bizarre industry of shark adventures, from vicious killing expeditions to face-to-face encounters designed to debunk the animal's scary image. Even legitimate scientists are getting in on the act by turning their facilities into entertainment venues for wide-eyed diving tourists hungry to rendezvous with the creatures.
Miami New Times  |  Amy Guthrie  |  06-17-2008  |  Animal Issues

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